Classic band will perform prior to the 56th running of NASCAR’s longest race

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CONCORD, N.C. — Danica Patrick emerged from behind the wheel of a 1957 Chevrolet on Tuesday afternoon at Charlotte Motor Speedway, chauffeuring two-thirds of classic rock superpower ZZ Top. It was a star-studded photo op, with Patrick flanked by bandleader Billy Gibbons and bassist Dusty Hill.

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What seemed to impress Patrick the most was her ability to navigate with the tricky "three on the tree" transmission on the bright-red Bel Air. Lately, she’s been wheeling her NASCAR Sprint Cup Series ride pretty well, too.
 
Patrick helped ZZ Top announce their role as the pre-race entertainment before the 56th annual Coca-Cola 600 on May 24. Though Patrick was two days shy of her first birthday when the group’s best-selling "Eliminator" album first hit shelves in 1983, she said she was familiar with their rich portfolio of songs, owing in large part to her father T.J. and his love of classic rock.
 
"’Legs’? I’m too short," said Patrick, when asked about favorite tunes. "But I do have long legs for my height."
 
Patrick’s buoyant mood wasn’t merely attributed to hanging out with music royalty on an otherwise cloudy Tuesday afternoon, but her impressive seventh-place finish in the Sprint Cup tour’s most recent race on March 29 at Martinsville Speedway. That momentum, plus a relaxing off-weekend spent in part attending a wedding for friends in Charleston, South Carolina, has her recharged for Saturday night’s resumption of the schedule at Texas Motor Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET, FOX).
 
"It really felt like two weekends. So, feeling really good, really refreshed," said Patrick, nine races into her tenure with crew chief Daniel Knost. "Had a nice weekend, but really, just encouraged by the start of the season and how it’s gone so far. … We’ve been to every style of track now, so I’m feeling confident in that and that we really only have up to go, based on how new our relationship is together as a driver and crew chief."
 
Patrick acknowledged that the results haven’t necessarily illustrated the performance boost for her Stewart-Haas Racing No. 10 Chevrolet, but that the driver/crew chief partnership with Knost is still in the early stages of taking hold. Martinsville produced potential strides and a seven-position bump to 15th in the series standings, but Texas and beyond will tell the tale of Patrick’s third full season in NASCAR’s big league.
 
"Building good cars, using all the resources that we have at Stewart-Haas and just giving me cars that were good from the get-go as soon as we get to the race track," Patrick said. "Now I think that there is definitely plenty of room to improve on our communication that allows for a lot of good changes throughout the weekend. You’re not always going to make the car better with everything that you do, but you need to do it throughout the weekend here and there.
 
"Sometimes we’re better at it than other times. That’s still a work in progress, but the start setup has been really solid so far everywhere this year."
 
Patrick did more than her part to promote not only her role in the Coca-Cola family of drivers, but also one of NASCAR’s signature events. But at other stages of her motorsports career, the month of May meant something far different — a chance to swig the winner’s traditional milk in the Indianapolis 500.
 
Though Patrick has kept open the possibility of attempting an Indy/Coke double, much like teammate Kurt Busch did last year and team owner/driver Tony Stewart accomplished before him, the further she gets away from IndyCar racing, the less appealing the opportunity is.
 
"For two years, I thought ‘let’s try and do this’ and it just didn’t work out," Patrick said. "I’m comfortable, but for me it has a lot more to do with, I don’t want to do the race just to do the race unless I’m able to feel like I have a chance to win then that’s the only reason why I want to do it. And there’s a lot of people who show up for the 500 that end up having a shot and doing really well, and I feel like I could, but the further I get away from those cars and driving them, the less I feel confident in that I would be able to do what I would feel like I need to do to win.
 
"Every year I was there, I pretty much had a chance to win, and I don’t want to do anything to take away from that."
 
Though Charlotte Motor Speedway‘s annual festival of speed in May is just more than six weeks away, ZZ Top welcomed the chance for a 45-minute show just before their kicking off a 15-city European tour in June. Marcus Smith, CEO of track ownership group Speedway Motorsports, Inc., said choosing the group as the pre-race show wasn’t the result of focus groups or other more scientific methods.
 
"Because they’re awesome, man. They’re ZZ Top," Smith said. "They’re legendary. This is the 56th running of the Coca-Cola and we wanted to go over the top, and I think ZZ Top is just one of the most iconic, classic rock American bands out there."
 
When ZZ Top formed in Houston, Texas, in 1969, NASCAR had just begun its third decade of operation. That year’s premier series schedule was 54 races long, still featured dirt tracks, and included a newly built Talladega Superspeedway in the wilds of Alabama. Pearson, Petty and Isaac ruled the season in cars with names like Cyclone, Torino and Charger Daytona.
 
As NASCAR was poised to enter its so-called "modern era," ZZ Top also was developing its trademark blues-heavy rock and boogie sound. Though the band evolved from its hardscrabble origins, becoming a pop-friendly MTV darling during the peak of their commercial success in the 1980s before returning to its guitar-driven roots, their lineup has remained the same for 45 years.
 
"There’s one song that we started writing when we first got together as a group. It’s yet to be finished," Gibbons said with a laugh. "Long, long time on that one."
 
The band’s ability to play to big rooms hasn’t changed either, and the venues don’t get much bigger than Charlotte Motor Speedway‘s 1.5-mile track. ZZ Top is no newcomer to NASCAR. The band played two pre-race shows in 2008, at Auto Club Speedway in March and a home-state appearance at Texas Motor Speedway in November. Given Gibbons’ love of hot rods — from the band’s signature "Eliminator" ’33 Ford to the custom ’48 "CadZZilla" — the stock-car pairing seems only natural.
 
"They ask us many times what the connection between ZZ Top and the automobile is," Gibbons said. "We say, well, it’s loud and fast, and that kind of makes sense."

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More on Dale Jr.’s shifter woes; Newman, RCR penalty

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Vibration issues that led to a broken gear shift hobbled Dale Earnhardt Jr. two weeks ago at Martinsville Speedway, leading to a 36th-place finish in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series STP 500.
 
It appeared to be a similar to the situation that struck the Hendrick Motorsports driver last fall at Charlotte Motor Speedway, one that resulted in a 20th-place finish and severely hampered the team’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup efforts.
 
A broken shifter also sidelined teammate Jimmie Johnson last season at Michigan.
 
Earnhardt Jr. said he believed it was some sort of breakage within the driveshaft that created the vibration and ultimately caused his car’s shifter to fail.

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"It’ll shake the shifter so bad, the shifter literally breaks right off, right on top of the transmission," Earnhardt said during his weekly Dale Jr. Download on Dirty Mo Radio.
 
"We put another shifter on the car, and it broke that one real quick. And then we put a third shifter on there that actually was a completely different model that held up."
 
At one point in the Martinsville race, Earnhardt said, he felt the best option would be for the team to take the car behind the wall to for repairs.
 
"I’m glad we didn’t because we would have lost a lot of laps doing it," he said. "But I felt like that vibration was so bad that we weren’t going to ever get the shifter thing fixed."
 
The 36th-place finish dropped Earnhardt to eighth in the standings.
 
After a weekend off for the Easter holiday break, the series heads to Texas Motor Speedway for Saturday night’s Duck Commander 500 (FOX, 7:30 p.m. ET).
 
"When you have those kinds of days, what’s important is that you get the car fixed and you go back out there," he said. "… It may seem pointless to worry about gaining a spot or two, but as a competitor, you have to find something to work for, some goal. … As a team, we have to stick together and try to go to the next race and put it behind you, and that’s the best way to do it. Get out there and do everything you can do, run every lap you can run and load up and go to the next race."

Rarity of the P5 Penalty
 
The P5 level penalty levied against the Richard Childress Racing No. 31 team last week was just the second of that severity since the debut of the NASCAR Deterrence System last season.
 
Driver Ryan Newman was stripped of 75 points after a tire audit conducted by NASCAR revealed the team had improperly altered air pressures in its tires during the Auto Club 400 earlier this year.
 
NASCAR also docked team owner Richard Childress 75 owner points; crew chief Luke Lambert was fined $125,000 and suspended for six races. Tire technician James Bender and engineer Philip Surgen were also suspended for six races.
 
RCR has filed an appeal, and a request for deferral of penalties until the appeal is heard has been granted. That means those suspended will continue to be allowed to attend events until a decision is rendered.
 
The loss of points, however, remains in place and would only be reversed should RCR win the appeal.
 
A P5 level penalty was lodged against Joe Gibbs Racing’s No. 11 team and driver Denny Hamlin in 2014 following the Sprint Cup Series race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
 
The team was penalized for improperly sealed panels/ductwork inside the No. 11 Toyota.
 
Hamlin and owner Joe Gibbs were docked 75 driver and car owner points, respectively, while crew chief Darian Grubb was suspended six weeks and fined $125,000. Car chief Wesley Sherrill was suspended six weeks.
 
JGR officials initially said they would appeal the decision but later chose to accept the penalties.
 
Under the deterrence system, violations are grouped from levels P1 through P6, according to severity.

Passing Grade for PRO Trailer; Upcoming Upgrades
 
Beginning with this weekend’s race at Texas, all Sprint Cup teams will be provided adequate bandwidth to allow videos detailing pit road infractions to be sent directly to the appropriate pit box.
 
In late May, when the series moves to Charlotte Motor Speedway, similar connectivity will also be provided in each garage bay.
 
Video showing an infraction is currently sent to the team in question – typically to their haulers where they have adequate bandwidth to handle video – almost as soon as it is received and processed by officials in the PRO trailer.
 
Some teams have the capability and bandwidth to forward it along to their pit box, where the crew chief and any others may view it as well.
 
Now, when a team commits and infraction, video evidence will be delivered to the crew chief on the pit box almost as soon as it occurs.
 
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Managing Director Richard Buck said the sanctioning body has been pleased with the new officiating system through the first quarter of the season.
 
"It’s leveling the playing field for all of pit road, which we’ve seen is a good thing," he said. "We’re getting a lot of kudos in the garage area for the use of it and how it operates."

Penalty Breakdown
 
With one quarter of the season complete, teams have been penalized 201 times through the first six races for technical infractions.
 
Not surprisingly, pitting before pit road is open has been the most common infraction, being called on 54 occasions. The loss of track position is of little consequence for a team that possibly needs to make repairs to a car that’s been damaged
 
The penalty for too many crewmen in contact with the pit area, another common occurrence (24), is often related to the "pitting too soon" infraction. Again, getting a car repaired and back on the track is more important than the loss of track position due to the penalty.
 
Too fast entering/exiting pit road has been called 35 times this season while uncontrolled tire violations have been called a season-high six times in the last two races.
 
"What we’re seeing, I think … is the teams are pushing the limits," Buck said. "They’re pushing the limits not only on the mechanical side but on the human side and the athlete’s side, they’re pushing these pit crews to get every tenth of a second on pit road.
 
"And with that comes the occasional mistake and a tire will get away from them. They’ll release it too soon, but our software and our PRO system is so exact and so precise that we’re catching those and seeing those."

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Fans encouraged to share photos of NASCAR experiences with mom

Share photos, enter sweepstakes: NASCAR with Mom website

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (April 6, 2015) — Family has always been a pillar of NASCAR®, as the sport was built by the contributions of iconic family names such as France, Petty, Earnhardt and Jarrett. From nurturing young drivers in their aspirations for a career in motorsports, to bringing families together at the track, to celebrating in Victory Lane, moms have served as the bedrock of NASCAR.

To further celebrate this tradition and spirit, NASCAR today launched "NASCAR with Mom," a Mother’s Day initiative aimed at sharing and celebrating memorable NASCAR moments with Mom.

Leading up to Mother’s Day Weekend — through the #NASCARwithMOM sweepstakes supported by NASCAR’s Official Partners 3M, Ford and Goodyear — fans are encouraged to share their most memorable NASCAR Mom photos on social media using the hashtag #NASCARwithMOM or by visiting www.nascar.com/NASCARwithMOM for the opportunity to win a once-in-a-lifetime NASCAR experience.

The Grand Prize package includes a ride in the Goodyear Blimp and an all-inclusive VIP experience for two during the 2015 Ford Championship Weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway, including tickets with VIP access. Additionally, five first-place prize winners will receive a NASCAR Racing Experience Qualifier for two. Fans can enter to win starting today through May 9 at 11:59 p.m.

"Mothers have made an indelible impact on our sport since the moment it was founded in 1947 — from the legacies of Anne B. France and Lynda Petty to the modern-day accomplishments of others like Teresa and Kelley Earnhardt," said Kim Brink, NASCAR senior vice president, marketing. "NASCAR with Mom honors the moments and memories fans and families in NASCAR have had with their mothers, and recognizes the critical role moms will play in the future of our sport."

During Mother’s Day weekend NASCAR, 3M, Ford and Goodyear will be also surprising moms and their children with unique experiences at the Acceleration Nation Experience at the track leading up to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series™, SpongeBob SquarePants 400 race at Kansas Speedway.

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Vote through April 19 for Keselowski’s NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race scheme

VOTE: Pick Keselowski’s NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race paint scheme
BUY: Get these throwback die-casts

Team Penske and longtime partner MillerCoors announced plans to celebrate 25 years together in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series with promotions and special paint schemes throughout 2015.

Team Penske and Miller Lite will give fans the chance to select Keselowski’s paint scheme for the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race (May 16, 7 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1). On Cheersto25Years.NASCAR.com, fans can choose from three iterations of the "Blue Deuce," which is now known as the "Blanco Deuce" with the body and number colors inverted on the current ride.

As of April 6, "The Original" has extended its lead to 46 percent, followed by "Gold" with 33 percent and "Classic Pour" with 21 percent.

For a little background, here’s a little information on each of the schemes.

The Original: The original Miller Lite "Blue Deuce" made its debut with Team Penske on the No. 2 entry back in 1997 with driver Rusty Wallace. That season, the "Blue Deuce" went to Victory Lane at Richmond International Raceway.

Gold: For the 2007 Daytona Shootout and NASCAR All-Star Race, Miller Lite unveiled a special gold color paint scheme to celebrate Miller Lite’s fourth gold award in the American-Style Light lager category at the World Beer Cup.

Classic Pour: From 2010-2012, there were plenty of trips to Victory Lane to celebrate in different variations of this paint scheme, including a 2010 sweep of the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race and Coca-Cola 600 as well as Miller Lite and Team Penske‘s first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship in 2012.

Click here to see all of the paint schemes, and vote here.

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Get an inside look at what it takes to transport a NASCAR vehicle

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Ever wonder what it looks like inside a NASCAR transporter? What are the driver’s responsibilites beyond getting the car to the track?

Join Ken Gober, transporter driver for the No. 14 Mobil 1 Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet SS team of Tony Stewart for Stewart-Haas Racing. In the first ‘Behind the Wheel’ video in this season’s series, Gober gives you an inside look at his role in trying to bring a winning team to the track each week.

Three-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Tony Stewart also makes an appearance to discuss what a good transporter driver can mean to the team.

Watch today’s video, which is part of NASCAR Inside Track presented by Mobil 1, then come back throughout the season for more behind-the-scenes videos from Mobil 1 and NASCAR.

 

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Driver scheduled to run six of the next seven races, picks up both Iowa events

HScott Motorsports with Chip Ganassi announced Monday an expanded schedule for Brennan Poole in 2015, adding both NASCAR XFINITY Series races at Iowa Speedway to his driving duties.

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The news comes just four days before Poole — a native of Houston-area suburb The Woodlands, Texas — competes at his home track of Texas Motor Speedway, site of Friday night’s O’Reilly Auto Parts 300 (8:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1). He’ll celebrate his 24th birthday Saturday.
 
Adding the May 17 and Aug. 1 events in Iowa brings Poole’s schedule to 17 races in the No. 42 Chevrolet, sponsored this weekend by DC Solar.
 
Poole has split time with Sprint Cup regular Kyle Larson in the No. 42 this season. Larson has notched three top-10 finishes in his three efforts. Poole finished ninth in his XFINITY debut last month at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. He led the first laps of his career the following weekend at Phoenix International Raceway, but a fuel miscalculation in the late stages cost him another likely top-10.
 
For his third start this weekend, Poole will make his first appearance on the 1.5-mile Texas Motor Speedway, even though he’s intimately familiar with the facility. He’s competed on the TMS dirt track, fifth-mile layout, road course and the quarter-mile oval on the speedway’s frontstretch.
 
Including the Texas event, Poole is scheduled to drive the No. 42 in six of the series’ next seven races.

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XFINITY Series regular preps for third consecutive start with Front Row

RELATED: Entry list for Texas race

Front Row Motorsports announced Monday morning that Chris Buescher will drive the team’s No. 34 Ford this weekend at Texas Motor Speedway.

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Buescher, a NASCAR XFINITY Series regular, is scheduled to make his third career Sprint Cup Series start for the Bob Jenkins-owned team in Saturday night’s Duck Commander 500 (7:30 p.m. ET, FOX). He’ll be pulling double-duty, driving the Roush Fenway Racing No. 60 Ford in Friday’s O’Reilly Auto Parts 300 (8:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1) for XFINITY cars.
 
Buescher is the fourth driver in six races for the No. 34 team. David Ragan began the year, but hopped in as the interim driver for the injured Kyle Busch in the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 Toyota. That move set off a chain of driver swaps, putting Joe Nemechek behind the wheel at Atlanta in the season’s second race.
 
Michael Waltrip Racing development driver Brett Moffitt competed in the next two events (Las Vegas, Phoenix) for Front Row, but rejoined MWR in its No. 55 Toyota after Brian Vickers was ruled out indefinitely with a recurrence of blood clots. That move made Buescher an 11th-hour replacement at Auto Club Speedway and the interim driver at Martinsville Speedway.
 
Ragan is expected to resume driver duties for the No. 34 team once Busch returns from injury.
 
Buescher notched his only XFINITY Series victory last August at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course. He currently ranks second in the XFINITY standings, just five points behind series leader Ty Dillon after five of 33 races scheduled this season.

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See what’s coming this week to NASCAR.com

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Here’s what you’ll see on NASCAR.com this week:

MONDAY: Junior Johnson, one of the most legendary figures in NASCAR history, recently attended the race at Martinsville Speedway — one of the sport’s most legendary tracks. NASCAR.com senior writer Kenny Bruce tagged along for the ride (literally) and gives an insightful view into the man. Other content includes a brand-new "Who Tweeted It?" guessing game.

TUESDAY: NASCAR.com’s new weekly series, Tech Talk, gives you crucial information on the competition side of the sport. Plus, we’ll reveal the big winner in the Biggest NASCAR Upset poll.

WEDNESDAY: With cars getting back on track at Texas Motor Speedway, check out which paint schemes will be on display.

THURSDAY: The NASCAR XFINITY Series has a pair of practices, and NASCAR.com has you covered with a leaderboard. Driver Reports, previewing the drivers currently in the Chase Grid, also makes its return after a week off.

FRIDAY: Get all the on-track action slated for Texas — Two Sprint Cup Series practices plus qualifying, and XFINITY Series qualifying and race — throughout the day.

Also coming this week: Senior writer Holly Cain examines how Kyle Busch‘s absence has opened the door for another competitor to a nab a Chase spot … We’ll look at Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s first career Cup victory for #TBT … In honor of Texas, where everything is bigger, a history of the cowboy hat in NASCAR.

Partners 3M, Ford, Goodyear join sport in ‘NASCAR with Mom’

Share photos, enter sweepstakes: NASCAR with Mom website

While there’s still five weeks to go until Mother’s Day, NASCAR is already gearing up for its celebration of Moms as they launched a new initiative Monday with partners 3M, Ford and Goodyear called "NASCAR with Mom." And they are calling on their fans to help ensure that this coming Mother’s Day is the most celebrated in NASCAR ever.

Aimed at sharing and celebrating memorable moments fans have had with their moms at NASCAR events in the past, "NASCAR with Mom" encourages fans to share photos of these moments on social media using the hashtag #NASCARwithMOM or by visiting www.nascar.com/NASCARwithMOM. By submitting photos of these moments, fans enter officially enter the "NASCAR with Mom" sweepstakes, which runs through Mother’s Day weekend.

"Mothers have made an incredible impact on our sport since the moment it was founded in 1947 — from the legacies of Anne B. France and Lynda Petty to the modern-day accomplishments of others like Teresa and Kelley Earnhardt," Kim Brink, NASCAR senior vice president of marketing, said. "NASCAR with Mom honors the moments and memories fans and families in NASCAR have had with their mothers, and recognizes the critical role moms will play in the future of our sport."

A Grand Prize winner of the sweepstakes will receive a ride in the Goodyear Blimp and an all-inclusive VIP experience for two during the 2015 Ford Championship Weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway, with five additional first-place prize winners receiving a NASCAR Racing Experience Qualifier for two.

The Mother’s Day celebration will culminate at Kansas Speedway during the SpongeBob SquarePants 400, where NASCAR, 3M, Ford and Goodyear will be surprising moms and their kids with activities and surprises.

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Get full lineup of NASCAR programming for the week

RELATED: See the full weekend schedule

All times ET

Monday, April 6
5:30 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBC Sports Network
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Tuesday, April 7

5 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBC Sports Network
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
6:30 p.m., NASCAR K&N Series East – Greenville-Pickens (taped), NBC Sports Network
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Wednesday, April 8
10 a.m., IMSA Continental Tire SportsCar Challenge: Sebring (re-air), FOX Sports 1
5 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBC Sports Network
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Thursday, April 9
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2
Midnight, NASCAR K&N Series East – Greenville-Pickens (taped), NBC Sports Network

Friday, April 10
10:30 a.m., NASCAR Masters of the Clock: The Legend of Martinsville (re-air), FOX Sports 1
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1
1 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FOX Sports 1
2 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, FOX Sports 1
3:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FOX Sports 1
4:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FOX Sports 1
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1
8 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay – XFINITY, FOX Sports 1
8:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series O’Reilly Auto Parts 350, FOX Sports 1

Saturday, April 11
3 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice (re-air), FOX Sports 1
4:30 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying (re-air), FOX Sports 1
10 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series: O’Reilly Auto Parts 350 (re-air), FOX Sports 1
6 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FOX Sports 1
7 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay – Texas, FOX
7:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Duck Commander 500, FOX
11:30 p.m., NASCAR Victory Lane, FOX Sports 2

Sunday, April 12
3 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Duck Commander 500 (re-air), FOX Sports 1
6 p.m., NASCAR K&N Series East – Greenville Pickens (taped), NBC Sports Network

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